[August 26, 2014]ANAHEIM, Calif. -- If losing Garrett
Richards to a season-ending knee injury had not yet sunk in for the Los
Angeles Angels, it has now.

Richards, the Angels' best pitcher this season, got hurt last
week in Boston. Monday night marked the first time his spot in the
rotation came up since he landed on the disabled list, and it didn't
go well.

Coupled with Oakland's win over the Houston Astros, the Angels fell
into a first-place tie with the A's in the American League West.
Both teams are 77-53.

LeBlanc, 30, has not won a game in the major leagues since June 2,
2013, when he was a Marlin. However, he pitched well for Triple-A
Salt Lake this season, going 10-3 with a 4.00 ERA, and he got the
call when Richards went down.

The Marlins' offense proved to be a bit more productive than those
in the Pacific Coast League, as LeBlanc (0-1) surrendered six runs
on seven hits and three walks (one intentional).

"I think Wade started out OK, but he just got away from some of the
things he does well," said Angels manager Mike Scioscia, who would
not commit to giving LeBlanc another start when his turn comes up
Saturday against Oakland. "He wasn't able to change speeds, and when
he did command some counts, wasn't able to make pitches and put some
guys away. All in all, I don't think Wade got comfortable out there
to use some of his strengths the way that he could have."

The Marlins finished with 11 hits, including three from left fielder
Christian Yelich, two each from second baseman Donovan Solano and
designated hitter Reed Johnson, and a three-run homer from right
fielder Giancarlo Stanton, his 33rd long ball of the season.

Right-hander Jarred Cosart lost two previous starts against the
Angels this year while pitching for the Astros, but he looked like a
new man in a Marlins uniform.

Cosart gave up one run on seven hits in 7 2/3 innings, improving to
2-1 with the Marlins since being traded from Houston on July 31. He
is 11-8 overall, including 20 starts for the Astros.

"Early in the game in Houston, I was able to attack the zone and get
quick outs, but as the game went on, I kind of got cute, left some
balls up and walked some guys," Cosart said of facing the Angels
earlier this season. "Against a lineup like that, you can't give
them anything free. You can't walk people, you can't let down on any
pitch. The top of the order is so good, people might breathe easy
when you get them out, but the bottom of that order can hurt you."

This time around, Cosart shut the Angels out until Kole Calhoun's
RBI double in the eighth inning.

"We faced him a couple times, but never did he pound the zone like he did
tonight," Scioscia said. "He was in the zone early and often. He started
off and threw a lot of fastballs that we missed, and as the game went
on, he brought a pretty good breaking ball into the mix and threw some
changeups. He had an incredible ball-strike ratio (80 strikes, 27 balls)
and we didn't get too many good looks at him."

LeBlanc managed to get through the first two innings unscathed, but the
Marlins broke through against him in the third. They had three hits in
the inning, including an RBI single by Yelich, a sacrifice fly by center
fielder Marcell Ozuna and a run-scoring hit from third baseman Casey
McGehee that made it 3-0.

In the fourth, the Marlins strung together three consecutive hits with
one out, including an RBI single by Yelich, and Scioscia had seen
enough.

Right-hander Cory Rasmus relieved LeBlanc and yielded the three-run
homer to Stanton that made it 7-0.

"If (Stanton's) not an MVP, I don't know what is," Cosart said of his
teammate, who is hitting .299 with 97 RBIs. "When you watch what he does
not only in batting practice, but in the weight room, on and off the
field, on a consistent basis, day in, day out ... You ask any pitcher in
the league, they don't like facing the guy. He hits ball farther than
anybody I've ever seen."

NOTES: Angels SS Erick Aybar extended his hitting streak to 10 games by
going 3-for-4 Monday. He is batting .462 (18-for-39) during the streak.
... Marlins RHP Steve Cishek has 31 saves this season, becoming the
third pitcher in club history to post back-to-back, 30-plus-save
seasons. The others are Juan Carlos Oviedo (2010-11) and Robb Nen
(1996-97). ... The Marlins have six players with at least 100 hits (3B
Casey McGehee, RF Giancarlo Stanton, LF Christian Yelich, CF Marcell
Ozuna, SS Adeiny Hechavarria and 1B Garrett Jones). Only one National
League team has more -- the Milwaukee Brewers, with seven. ... Angels RF
Kole Calhoun is the only player in the majors hitting .300 or better
with at least 10 homers and 50 RBIs since June 1.